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  • av Hazel Matthews
    687,-

    Mrs. Mathews, descendant of a pioneer Oakville family, traces the development of a typical Ontario lake port and pictures social life at the various stages of the town's development. The history is complete, beginning with the earliest settlement and ending at a period in which Oakville has changed its character completely.

  • av Philip Ouston
    485

    The power of imagination to construct those myths which alone, according to Barres, give sense and value to our absurd existence and by which, above all, men are moved to believe and act, was at the centre of his life-long preoccupation with the art of arousing and directing spiritual energy in individuals and groups.

  •  
    441,-

    In June 1967, the Earth Science Division of the Royal Society of Canada held a symposium to assess the country's activities and accomplishments in the earth sciences and to provide some guidelines and predictions for the future. The papers given at the symposium are collected in this volume.

  •  
    441,-

    The critical survey and annotated bibliography lists books and journal articles published on Calderon between 1951 and 1969. It continues the work on Calderon contained in W.T. McCready's bibliografia tematica de estudios sobre el Teatro Espanol Antiguo, and follows the pattern of the Lope de Vega Studies 1937-1962.

  •  
    849,-

    This collection consists of extensively reproduced reports of law suits, some less extensive excerpts, and some excerpts that can best be described as notes of reports. The word "materials" covers these lesser excerpts, but it also covers a variety of other "legal" things.

  • av Agnes MacKay
    433

    In The Universal Self Miss Mackay examines Val�ry's achievement, both as poet and creative thinker, placing him in the environment of literary life in Paris; tracing the development of his thought, from his early friendship with Mallarm� to the years when his genius was widely acknowledged.

  •  
    520,-

    Where is Canada going in the next half-century? Have her people a sense of purpose for themselves or their country? A number of writers well known for their articles and books on the Canadian cultural, social, and political sense come together here to take up these vital questions.

  • av Desmond Morton
    441,-

    A Peculiar Kind of Politics presents the inside story of how Canadians earned their autonomy in war through the increasing competence they displayed, not merely in action, but in their own administrative management.

  •  
    485

    Beckwith's career as a composer, performer, teacher, administrator, author, editor, and promoter of Canadian music is unparalleled. It is fitting, then, that this group of papers, organized as a tribute to him, reflects not only his contribution, but also the current major directions of Canadian music.

  •  
    849,-

    This casebook contains collections of facts or events, some hypothetical, but most of them historical, that raises serious conflicts of interest and require settlement by some device, either the dictate of some private individual or group, or the exercise of a more orderly "legal" procedure.

  •  
    790,-

    Thomas Hood, 1799-1845, is one of the most notable minor authors of the late Romantic and early Victorian period. This is the only edition of Hood's letters; it is definitive and thoroughly annotated.

  • av Patrick O'Flaherty
    441,-

    The Rock Observed is a study of how Newfoundland has been perceived over the centuries by the islanders themselves and by outsiders. It offers an integrated survey of Newfoundland literature, culture, and history.

  • - The Making of a University
    av Arthur Morton
    293

    This volume tells the story of the University from its beginning to the end of its first and most formative period in 1919-20. At his death in 1945, Professor Arthur S. Morton left uncompleted a manuscript of a history of the University; and from his material Dr. Carlyle King has extracted and assembled this book.

  • av Paul Riegert
    524,-

    This is the story of entomology in western Canada from the time of the explorers to the outbreak of the Second World War. Riegert describes the impact of insect hordes; from the mosquitoes which assaulted the Danish explore Jens Munk on the shores of Hudson Bay in 1619, to the devastating plagues of grasshoppers of the 1930s.

  • av George L. Parker
    515,-

    This first extensive history of Canada's early book trade begins with the impact of the Gutenberg printing revolution. Parker analyses the role of technological advances in printing, to the growing complexity of the book trade in the major cities up to the time in the last quarter of the nineteenth century.

  •  
    441,-

    Arnold J. Toynbee's voluminous studies of world history embraced every civilization and religion of the past and present. In this volume twelve historians of widely differing specializations re-examine Toynbee's work. The volume is published to commemorate the centenary of Toynbee's birth.

  • av Ernest Oppenheimer
    441,-

    The author examines a representative number of Goethe's poems, masques, theatrical prologues, and so on, and defines the circumstances of their origin, sometimes in detail and always in the context of the great artistic, social, and political movement of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.

  • av Kenneth McKay
    485

    Rooted in close analyses of individual poems, Many Glancing Colours becomes a study of the development and character of Tennyson's liberal artistic imagination.

  •  
    382,-

    The primary object of the series is to promote collaboration between lawyers, social scientists, juristic philosophers, and others who are interested in exploring social values, processes, and institutions. The present volume is devoted to topics relating to the changing role of trade union activity in Canada.

  • av Colin McNairn
    382,-

    As the state comes to play a larger role in the community the question of the extent to which government is subject to the general law of the land assumes increasing importance. This book examines the limits of two related forms of state immunity: crown or governmental immunity from statue and intergovernmental immunity.

  • av John Meisel
    485

    The book provides an account of conditions in Canada in 1957 as a background for its discussion of election issues and party organizations.

  • av Paul A. Marshall
    337,-

    In this book, Paul Marshall offers the first systematic study of the development of the idea of vocation in England from 1500 to 1700.

  • av Douglas McCalla
    382,-

    The trading business of Peter and Isaac Buchanan became one of Canada's largest. This history of success and failure reveals much about the Anglo-Canadian trading system and the Upper Canadian economy of the period. This book illuminates a key period in Canada's economic and historical development.

  •  
    687,-

    Professor Hilborn has aimed primarily at presenting a Mexican national outlook, in the hope that more people may be led to interest themselves in the psychological and spiritual aspects of Mexican culture.

  • av Marie Tremaine
    790,-

    Marie Tremaine's bibliography was first published by UTP in 1951 and is a cornerstone of bibliography and book history studies in Canada.

  •  
    485

    The first Banff Conference on Theoretical Psychology was held in April 1965. The aim of the conference was to take the first steps toward defining areas of common ground among diverse theories of psychology, with a view to making more integrated and comprehensive statements about behaviour.

  • - By a Liberal in Opposition
    av J.W. Pickersgill
    441,-

    This latest volume in Pickersgill's memoirs cover his years in opposition, from St Laurent's defeat at the hands of Diefenbaker in 1957 through to the election of a Liberal government under Lester Pearson six years later and Pickersgill's session as House Leader.

  •  
    382,-

    This volume of essays and bibliography, compiled in his honour, reflects the breadth of Frank Underhill's influence in history, public policy, poetry, Canadian culture, and foreign relations.

  •  
    524,-

    Partly a love story, partly a fascinating view of nineteenth-century social history and developments in early Ontario, these letters are a moving revelation of two important Canadian ancestors.

  •  
    485

    This book gives a carefully documented interpretation of Canadian -American relations during an important period in Canadian history.

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